These loans, which allow seniors to spend their home equity without selling their home, historically have been cumbersome and expensive. But new options empower seniors to tap smaller amounts of equity in a more affordable way, according to Peter Bell, president of the National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association, a group in Washington, D.C., that represents lenders and investors.

The biggest change is the introduction of a new reverse mortgage, called the Home Equity Conversion Mortgage Saver option, or HECM Saver. It has a cheaper upfront mortgage insurance premium, or MIP, compared with the traditional HECM reverse mortgage, now known as the standard option.

Mortgage insurance protects lenders from loan losses, although borrowers pay the cost. Most reverse mortgages are insured through the Federal Housing Administration.

The trade-off, due to the lower MIP and other program changes, is a 10 percent to 18 percent reduction in the maximum loan amount allowed on the saver option, and 1 percent to 5 percent on the standard option, depending on the borrower’s age and interest rate, Bell says. The lower loan amount allowed on the saver option means the FHA’s risk exposure is lessened.

“In exchange for taking less money, the borrower gets to pay a 0.01 percent upfront MIP instead of a 2 percent upfront MIP,” he says.

The upfront MIP is based on the value of the house, not the loan amount.

But still, the savings are clear. On a home worth, say, $250,000, the upfront MIP on the saver option would be just $25, while the upfront MIP on the standard option would be $5,000.

Borrowers also pay an annual MIP of 1.25 percent of the outstanding loan balance on either the saver or standard option.

Another change is that many lenders have reduced or eliminated their origination fees on reverse mortgages, according to Barbara Stucki, vice president of home equity initiatives at the National Council on Aging, a nonprofit service and advocacy group for older Americans in Washington, D.C. The maximum loan origination fee was capped by law at $6,000 several years ago, but lower fees are now commonplace.

“Some banks charge no origination fee or a reduced origination fee, and some may charge little or nothing in the way of servicing fees,” Stucki said.

That could mean savings for borrowers, but it also means borrowers must shop around as fees are no longer standardized. A low fee could be offset by a higher interest rate.

A third recent change is that lenders can use a minimum expected interest rate of 5 percent, instead of 5.5 percent, to calculate the maximum loan amount, Bell says. That lower rate means homeowners can borrow more money at a lower cost.

Borrowers may be tempted by the fixed-rate option, but Susanna Montezemolo, vice president of federal affairs at the Center for Responsible Lending in Washington, D.C., says the adjustable rate may be a smarter choice because the fixed rate requires that the borrower tap the full amount of equity upfront.

“For the majority of people, it makes more sense to take out a minimum amount upfront and then have access to that line of credit, because they will owe less in interest over time,” she says.

The revamped reverse mortgage is an improvement, but it’s still a loan against the value of a house. The borrower gets a lump sum, line of credit, stream of monthly term payments or combination of those choices, but the mortgage loan still accrues interest, and one day, the principal and interest must be paid off.

“It’s very important that people understand they aren’t getting rid of their mortgage. They are deferring the payments, and the payments are accumulating over time, and they are paying interest on the deferred payments,” Stucki says.

The maximum loan amount today is $625,000, but that could change if Congress decides to lower national loan limits.

this week
Mortgage rates scored increases this week, with the bellwether 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage crossing the 5 percent threshold for the first time in more than seven months.
The latest Bankrate survey found the 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage rose 6 basis points, to 5.02 percent, from a week earlier. A basis point is one-hundredth of 1 percentage point. The 30-year fixed was last above 5 percent in Bankrate’s May 13 survey, when it stood at 5.07 percent, before beginning a months-long descent that began to reverse in early November, when rates fell to 4.42 percent.
This week’s climb was even steeper for 15-year fixed rate mortgages, which popped by 10 basis points to land at 4.39 percent.
Adjustable-rate mortgages told a similar story, with the 5/1 ARM ascending 8 basis points, to 4 percent. Jumbo mortgages, generally defined as those more than $417,000, carried the highest rates, with 30-year jumbos rising 5 basis points to 5.64 percent.